
“I think wasteful spending and mission creep of what government does is a bipartisan issue,” Fischer said. “This isn’t meant to be a super hyper partisan thing. I think that both parties share a good bit of the blame for what’s going on at the federal level, and we’re certainly not immune.”
The group about 25 members has been meeting virtually with a deadline coming up Friday, the day to submit proposed amendments to Gov. Mike DeWine’s two-year state budget.
The DOGE caucus is an informal group; it’s not a House committee with scheduled public meetings. And Fischer also noted it has other limitations.
“We’re a legislative caucus, not an executive agency. We’re not going to be emailing any state employees asking them to give us five things they worked on throughout the week,” Fischer said, referencing the communications that have come from Musk and DOGE to federal workers which have raised legal questions. “We’re really just trying to get like-minded people into a room to talk about making sure that government is spending our money wisely and focusing on its core functions that we all agree with.”
House Speaker Matt Huffman (R-Lima) has set a goal of passing the budget in that chamber by Easter break, around April 20. The budget must also pass the Senate and be signed by DeWine by the end of June. It’ll be DeWine’s last budget, as he leaves office next year.